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Refining margins watch (was Tesoro)

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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 21:40:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mechler', 'S')ince the RBOB situation is tight

What is RBOB?
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 21:42:41

Reformulated gasoline Blendstock for Oxygenate Blending

Ethanol being one of the popular Oxygenates.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 16:19:55

Update: We have not checked in on this for awhile.

At 93.76 for crude, and 2.368 for RBOB, the refinery margin has now dropped back down to 13.5 cents per gallon, or $5.69 per barrel. So, the plant manager at the refinery will not be a happy camper this week, because at this rate, he is losing money on unleaded.

At $2.58 for heating oil, though, he is a little happier:35 cents per gallon, and $14.60 per barrel.

So, this morning, when he came in, he probably turned the knob on the reactor all the way to "heating oil" to whatever extent he can.

The weighted average is 21 cents/gal or $9.09 per barrel, so this is probably enough money overall to keep him coming in every morning.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Fri 30 Nov 2007, 13:45:12

Update:

Current crude oil price: 89
Current Unleaded Price:2.23
Current Heating Oil Price: 2.51

Refinery Margin:23.1 cents/gallon, 9.71 per barrel

Despite the oil price being down $11 in the last couple of weeks, tne refining margin is still not really all that good.

Unleaded is only 11 cents, heating oil is more like 35 cents.

So despite the recent price swing, the refiners are still not making enough money at the current crude oil price. So, either the products will go up, or the crude price will continue to go down.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby Starvid » Fri 30 Nov 2007, 14:09:10

Does anyone know why refining margins are so weak? Considering they were very strong just a few years ago.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Fri 30 Nov 2007, 19:13:00

There is a seasonal period during the fall normally in which the demand for both gasoline and heating oil is at its minimum.

There is another minimum, in January and February, on gasoline.

The maximum in heating oil has not yet hit. It does not hit until mid January. Maybe a little earlier if the weather gets cold.

This year, the gasoline followed the normal pattern of relatively low demand, but the crude oil went crazy (temporarily) because of all of these other problems. The products were catching up briefly awhile back.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Thu 06 Dec 2007, 09:09:58

Update:

Crude price: 85.93
Unleaded: 2.189
Distillates: 2.456

Refinery Margin: .2578$/gal or $10.83 $/bbl

The oil price at which the refinery margin returns to about .33/gal is $83.74, so we are almost there.

I wish I had bookmarked that thread where we had predicted that the refinery margin situation would correct itself by December 7th (maybe it's this one) because it looks as though this is exactly what happened.

To be sure, the less efficient refiners would still like to have this margin be a little higher, but the low cost guys are starting to make money again.

So we are almost at the point at which the prices will stabilize a little bit. If we get some cold weather, and heating oil goes up, we could get back up into the 40's before long.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Thu 06 Dec 2007, 17:06:08

Update (8 hours later):

Crude price: 90.57
Heating Oil 2.55
Unleaded 2.30

Refinery margin: .2510 cents/gal 10.545 $/barrel
Crude oil price needed for .33 refining margin: 87.22

Up almost $5 in 8 hours, and an 11 cent increase in RBOB. Right here is why it is hard to make money trading commodities. The refinery margin is about the same as it was, though, and we are still not too far from people wanting to flip the switch and run the reactor again.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Thu 06 Dec 2007, 22:10:41

Image

Here is a graph for you. It's the refinery margins, calculated the same way as we were calculating them above, including the effects of heating oil. Some of the earlier calculations in this thread were based on unleaded only, so this is probably a little better indicator. An adjustment for propane or jet fuel would have added a little to the calculation, not much.

The graph covers the period since October 1. Units are $ per barrel, so divide by 42 to get the cents/gal

As you can see, when Uncovering Truths started this thread on November 1, we had just passed the absolute minimum (the white arrow) So, the frequent viewers of PO.com who had been following this thread and been inclined to invest in the refiners would have gone in at almost the point of minimum refinery margin. This strategy would have been a little iffy: Most of the stocks of these refiners continued to go down. I think Mechler liked WNR and that one has gone down only about 15% or so. Some of these others have been beaten down a lot more. HOC, most heinously, has gone from 65 to about 42.

The strategy of going out and filling up your red plastic gas cans would also have been sort of iffy. You would have looked like a financial genius on November 9, and around Thanksgiving, when the prices spiked up, but what really mainly happened was that oil went down.

However, since then, despite gyrations in both markets, the overall trend has been that refinery margins have improved a lot. In fact, we are now at the point, as predicted, when the relationship between the product prices and the crude oil prices are such that most (not all) of the refiners are profitable again. We still have another maybe $2-3 per barrel to go on this in order to get everyone into the black.

So, what is going to happen from here on? I think what will happen is that the current trend will continue until right after New Year. Reason: This is a time of year of strong unleaded demand, for holiday travel, and also pretty strong distillate demand, because people are filling their heating oil tanks. If the winter turns out to be mild, we might be in for some backing off of this in January/Early February.

But after that, hang on to your wallet, because nothing whatsoever has changed from last spring, when refinery capacity shortage kicked in, and the refiners were fattening up.

Far be it from me, some guy on the internet, to make predictions on the stock price of a given company, but you have to say that at this point, some of these guys ought to be turning around, because all of a sudden, for the first time in awhile, the refiners are going to be making some money. They may have a bad fourth quarter, but the very temporary condition of bad refinery margins have, for the moment, improved.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby Mechler » Thu 06 Dec 2007, 23:45:40

Thanks for the updates, Pup. Keep 'em coming!
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Wed 12 Dec 2007, 23:07:03

Update:

Crude price: 93.76
RBOB: 2.398
Heating Oil: 2.634

Refinery Margin: 26.53 cents/gal or 11.14 dollars/barrel

Margins are still steadily climbing, which is completely unsurprising to the viewers of PO.com who have been on to this for awhile. About six weeks or so ago, everyone was confused as to why the finished products prices were mysteriously decoupled from crude oil. Well, that situation is no longer with us. The products are now climbing just as much as the crude oil.

Image

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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Thu 13 Dec 2007, 09:55:25

I have to have some more fun with this:

In the third quarter, when TSO was so beaten down, its average refinery margin was $6.16 per barrel. So let's say for the sake of argument that they are pretty typical, and the refinery margin is now $11.16, an even $5 per barrel improvement.

They are going to refine somewhere around 635 kb/d

During the fourth quarter, assuming the trend continues and the average refinery margin for the quarter ends up about where it is now, they will make an additional $285 million dollars (635kb/d times 90 days times $5 per barrel).

They have 137 million shares outstanding. So their increased earnings will be about $2.09 per share. Their PE ratio is about 8. So we can expect their stock price to go from what it is now, about 47, to roughly 63, give or take, when the market wakes up to what is happening.

Kerkorian knew this a few weeks ago when he bid $64 for 21.9 million shares of the company.

Yahoo News

As it turns out, a week or so ago, the management rejected Kerkorian's offer of $64 per share, and adopted some anti-takeover rules. No doubt there was some self-preservation involved, but with the stock price now at 47, you have to say to yourself, "what do they know that they are not telling anybody?" They must be pretty confident that the stockholders value will be better served by not working with Kerkorian, and waiting for the stock to do what it is going to do when the refinery margins get to where they are going.

It will be interesting to see how all of this plays out.

Per what we said earlier, I think TSO is a small example of what is playing out among all of the refiners. WNR might be in exactly the same boat.

This is why people like Kerkorian are rich. They see unrealized value, and try to take advantage of it. The Marxists among us will point out that they add no value, do no work, are much less valuable to the company than the night shift maintenance supervisor who has to keep the whole thing from blowing up, but have a chance to make a fortune on one deal because of their ability to recognize and understand value.

There is some risk involved, of course. It might go the other way. (example: Kerkorian and GM). Kerkorian can also add some upside value, like we said the other day, by getting rid of the entrenched management, making efficiency improvements, etc. But, evidently he ticked them off, so it will be someone else who adds the value. This is capitalism for you.


The frequent viewers of PO.com or anyone else can capture some of this value themselves with an E-trade account, and few hundred in savings, if you are willing to share the risk. This is also capitalism for you.

The next question is: Where is this money coming from? Well, as we know this money is coming from the extra amount that you and I pay at the gas pump, or every time we turn on our oil-heated furnace. So in effect, there is a wealth transfer between the consuming public, and the stockholders. Nothing says that someone cannot protect themselves at least partially by becoming one of the stockholders, per the above. It will put you in a better mood when you fill up your SUV.


Warning: I am just some guy on the internet. This post, like all of my posts, is for entertainment purposes only, not to be construed as any investment advice. Do not accept investment advice from someone who has a job. Do not believe everything you see on the internet.

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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 12:13:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')rude Oil 89.8
HO 2.5974
RBOB 2.3297

Margin 12.882062 $/bbl
Margin 0.306715762 Cents/gal


Update:

We are now approaching refinery margins close to average for the last couple of years: over 30 cents/gal and nearly $13 per barrel.

The result of this cold weather is that HO has stayed nice and high, while the crude oil price has come down some.

TSO, VLO and HOC are all up this morning as a result
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby qwanta » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 16:51:49

Hi pup,

thanks for the updates and for sharing your valuable knowledge with us.

I was wondering, are refiners like Tesoro & Valero the best way of playing the continuing increase in oil prices in the long term, in your opinion?

I own shares in both, but with the crack spread uncertainty I'm thinking of weighting more towards national companies like PetroBrasil, PetroChina or oil service like Schlumberger which seem perhaps like a more foolproof way of betting on continuing high oil prices (especially if the US economy slows down, say)
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby threadbear » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 17:19:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lawnchair', 'F')ascinating. Tesoro has the major refinery in the Dakotas (Mandan ND). There have been actual lingering shortages of diesel and petrol in the region. For whatever reason (politics?) they haven't raised prices as much as I would think they could have. That won't continue.


I think refiners are being super cautious right now. They don't want organized gouging to become a major campaign issue. There are many historical precedents for this kind of pricing action and they usually coincide with political elections.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 21:21:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'e')specially if the US economy slows down, say
)

Warning: I am just some guy on the internet. This post, like all of my posts, is for entertainment purposes only, not to be construed as any investment advice. Do not accept investment advice from someone who has a job. Do not believe everything you see on the internet.

I think the answer is yes.

The way to play this is not the big integrated oil companies. These big producers (XOM, BP, others) are vulnerable to all of the SP500 derivative stuff, and also vulnerable because part of their value is derived from owning reserves, which ought to be shrinking.

As an example, BP has just announced unloading all of their US retail operations because they did not add value to the business.

I think the oil service people should do well. Not a week goes by without some article to the effect that all of the capacity in this industry is booked several years in advance.

The refiners will also do well, but there will be periods such as what we just went through when they will be beaten down. The non-dollar denominated companies should insulate you a little bit from the US economy,

So you are on the right track. I am not smart enough to time the entry and exit points of individual stocks personally, and this important skill can make a big difference in your returns, so I typically favor index mutual funds. Make sure the expense ratio is less than 1% and no load and no withdrawal fee. That way I can spend more time keeping track of the weekly petroleum status report, and leave the stock trading to the pros.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby qwanta » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 10:30:14

Thanks. :)

I actually have the bulk of my oil investment in a fund (GAGEX), but I like to speculate a little on the side with individual stocks. In any case, I think I'm going to hold VLO & TSO until Spring at least to see what happens with higher gas prices.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Wed 19 Dec 2007, 10:42:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')rude Oil 90.24
HO 2.555
RBOB 2.3157

Margin 11.341158 $/bbl
Margin 0.270027571 Cents/gal


Bumpy Plateau.

Some of the talking heads on CNBC last night were dissing the refining sector (I cannot find the clip, unfortunately). However, until these refinery margins show up on the books in January we will not know the full effect on the stock price.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Fri 21 Dec 2007, 15:17:02

Update:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')rude Oil 91.9
HO 2.6
RBOB 2.3585

Ref Margin 12.9385 $/bbl
Ref Margin 0.3081 Cents/Gal


We are back up to respectable today.

Just for the pure joy of it, I have done a little calcuation on the issue of "reinvestment rate", per the comment the other day in the "bush calls for new refineries" thread.

Dantespeak is actually a professional in this area, so he can help us if we are too far off. Plus I have not done this calculation in a long time.

We know from our observations of the last several refinery projects that currently, it takes $20,000 per BOPD capacity to build a refinery. So, for a 100,000 bpd refinery, we can expect to pay $2B.

At 95% utilization, we can expect to produce approximately 35 million barrels per year. Note that TSO would like to get between 93 and 95% utilization this fall, so this is a little aggressive.

So, at what refining margin could we expect to make enough money to justify risking $2B on more capacity?

I have estimated capital costs by using the excel (PMT) function, using 15% as the "hurdle rate", $2B as the investment, a 15 year investment time frame, and a zero salvage value. At this rate, the annual C of C is about $300 million.

The net of the gross manufacturing margin (300 million barrels times the gross refinery margin minus the cost of capital) is the annual return. The present value of the annual returns for 15 years at 8% interest (which is TSO's average interest rate) is obsiously dependent on the refinery margin, but I used MS-goal seek to arrive at the margin at which the project will break even, (the income stream is equal to the value of the investment) and it is about $15 per barrel.

Obviously the real calculation needs to be made both before and after taxes, considering depreciation and the tax effects of the interest payments, but I do not want to make this overly complicated, because I am just some guy on the internet and this is close enough.

But to make a long story short, anything above $15 per barrel is approximately enough to justify the new refinery, and anything below that is not enough. Obviously, a lot below this, like about $6, is enough to cause TSO to lose money, which is what happened in the last quarter. The frequent viewers of PO.com may have observed that the "refinery expansion" announcments have completely stopped for about the last 5 months. This is why.

So, unless TSO is confident that they will consistently get greater than $15 per barrel refinery margin, they will just run what they have and not worrry about it. For an outfit like TSO, with only 660,000 bpd capacity in the whole company, if they expand their refinery, they have an excellent chance to bankrupt the whole company, if the price turns around and they cannot make enough to pay the financing amount.

So the government can do several things to help this process along if they choose: The most popular is to give out various tax breaks, extra depreciation benefit, or some combination, to lower the risk. This would lower the effective refinery margin needed to make the investment. However, some of us believe that the government has no business doing this, because it amounts to subsidizing the oil companies, and also, that the oil companies are evil in some way, and are exploiting us, etc. etc. so the taxpayers should not be doing this.

The marxists among us may propose fixing the price of gasoline and/or crude oil at some rate so that the risk can be reduced, and ensure a consistent return on investment. In the US, we did this with utilities for a long time. This never works for long, though. You end up with shortages, because there will always be people complaining that the rate is set too high. A lot of the idiot nations which have tried this have recently run into a serious problem in this regard.

All I can say is, at the current economics, it is really iffy as to whether the US refiners like TSO are willing to accept the risk to expand the refining capacity, so it is quite likely that we will go for several more years of being short on fuel every spring, before the refinery margin finally gets to the point at which these guys can responsibly run their business.

Here is my little spreadsheet:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '$')20,000 dollars per BOD cost of plant
100,000 BOPD plant size
$2,000,000,000 investment needed
34,675,000 annual production (barrels)
14.82 dollars/barrel ref margin
$513,771,970 Gross Margin (annual)
($297,420,961) COC 15 yrs/13% hurdle rate
216,351,009 PBT
$2,000,000,000 PV (15 yrs/8%)
0 NPV


p.s. The giant refineries supposed to be under construction in Saudi do not follow these same rules of economics, since they are getting their oil "at cost", and not at the world price. Also note, that if you build a refinery that takes heavy/sour crude oil, you are a little better off because your overall margin is higher, since these grades of crude are cheaper.
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Re: Tesoro's earnings fall 80 percent

Unread postby pup55 » Wed 26 Dec 2007, 12:43:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')rude Oil 96.11
HO 2.666
RBOB 2.458

Ref Margin 12.1055 $/bbl
Ref Margin 0.2882 Cents/Gal


Update:

Notice that what is happening now is completely different than what was happening last fall, when the crude oil price nearly hit 100.

At that point, crude went up, but the products stayed fairly cheap. As we all know, the frequent viewers of PO.com were questioning what was happening on this.

Now, however, the products have pretty much followed the crude price. Today, in conjunction with the crude price increase, the finished products are up about 7 cents a gallon.

The refinery margin is still over $12. down a little from the other day, but still respectable.

So, at least for the time being, any crude oil price will cause finished products inflammation, and the public will be more sensitized to it, especially in about two weeks when the credit card bills hit.

Also note, that by the end of January, we will go into a period of low gasoline demand, so it will be interesting to see if we return to the same scenario we had during the fall.
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